Insulation is a bit of a mystery to the British public and heating is also sparsely used and the principal effects/interplay of the two hardly understood - the old remedy of maintaining draughts remains the norm for very many. Solid foam insulation is a vapour barrier but by its very nature it also does not give rise to condensation on its surface because the surface more or less stays at the temperature of the air touching it. If the insulation is not thick enough then the (inside) surface will cool down in cold weather, at which point the air at it starts to approach dew point. In almost all of the UK, if the thickness is as much as is required to sustain a temperature difference of 15 degrees Celsius between outside and inside with minimal heat transfer, then there should be negligible risk of adverse moisture buildup at any time within the house, including unoccupied roof space.